
It does a nice job, but definitely not perfect. The quality of the enlarged files is still decreasing, even if you use some noise reduction and sharpening over the result. There are no options to fine tune the result, it’s a take it or leave it feature, at least for now (******** is probably saving some improvements for future updates). It’s only available for raw files, so if you try to enlarge a jpg file, it won’t work, or at least not yet. Right now, it’s only available in Photoshop, although there are plans to be introduced in Lightroom in the future. What are the Super Resolution disadvantages? This way, the quality would be much more acceptable. That’s why you should consider saving your enlarged and processed image at half the size provided by the Super Resolution feature, so it would only be double than the original.

However, it won’t make miracles: your 10 megapixel photo won’t have the same quality when enlarged at 40 megapixels. It uses ********'s AI and machine learning platform. The new feature works better than just upsizing the image from the Image size. So, a 10 megapixel photo will become a 40 megapixel one, and the result will be saved as a raw. Then, click on Enhance again and the image will be enlarged by a factor of four: the size of each side will be doubled. While editing a raw image in Camera Raw, you can right click on it and choose Enhance. Here are my thoughts on Photoshop super resolution and alternatives for photo enlarging: Yet, having the early frustrations still in my mind, I was always interested in the ways I could upsize my images and not lose the quality. Later on, I lost count, but now I'm using a 30 megapixels camera and I really don't see much need for a higher resolution in 99.99% of the time. Newspapers back then used to print some nice first pages from those 3 megapixel photos. However, the interpolation wasn't necessarily great, even by the standards of that time, so I was using it in the original resolution, mostly.


Then, in 2002, I bought a Fuji with 3 megapixels, capable of a 6 megapixels interpolation, and I thought I was really on to something. I remember the first digital camera I laid my hands on, back in the year 2000, was an Olympus which had only 1.3 megapixels.
